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NASA chief scientist wants new, additional mission for agency -- climate

Shelly Shelly Follow Jan 15, 2022 · 2 mins read
NASA chief scientist wants new, additional mission for agency -- climate
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The new chief scientist at NASA wants to add a mission to the space agency, looking at both the Earth and the heavens.

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Katherine Calvin was appointed as NASA’s chief scientist this week.

“When people hear NASA, I want them to think of climate science alongside planetary science,” Calvin told CNBC.

She said her specialty is climate, explaining that all of the NASA chief scientists have a distinct field of expertise.

But the mission is not new in Calvin’s eyes.

“NASA is already a world leader in climate,” she told CNBC. “And so I’m just communicating that science and connecting it to other agencies, to the public.”

The climate change we see is the result of human activities — primarily burning fossil fuels — adding greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, where they trap more heat. Since about 1850, humans have raised atmospheric CO2 by nearly 50%. https://t.co/a9rYjkcezR pic.twitter.com/gp5KLKEGZ4 — NASA Earth (@NASAEarth) January 13, 2022

NASA tracks the climate with dozens of satellites that orbit the Earth, observing changes in the oceans, clouds and carbon dioxide levels.

It also uses the information and creates technology to help reverse the effects of what we are doing to the climate, like using less fuel and reducing greenhouse gas emissions during flights, Calvin told CNBC.

She also wants to take all of the information that NASA gathers and centralize it in one place instead of it being spread across the internet.

NASA is still working out how to do that, “but the idea is to get all the information that’s relevant in a place where people can find it,” Calvin told CNBC.

Calvin has worked at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory’s Joint Global Change Research Institute and has co-authored more than 100 publications, many focusing on growing populations and the effects on agriculture and water scarcity in light of climate change, according to NASA.

Expand Autoplay Image 1 of 35 NASA history In this image released by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), astronaut Richard M. Linnehan works to replace the starboard solar array on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) during an extravehicular activity (EVA) to try and upgrade some components of the telescope March 4, 2002 in space. NASA plans to replace the Hubble telescope with the new James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and plans to deorbit the Hubble telescope sometime in 2010. According to Anne Kinney, division director of astronomy and physics at NASA headquarters, NASA states August 1, 2003 that it is firmly committed to the new JWST, a deep-space observatory due for launch in 2011 on a European Ariane 5 rocket. (Photo by NASA/Getty Images) (NASA/Getty Images)

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Shelly
Written by Shelly Follow
Blogger, techy, love to explore new ideas and write on my morning coffee!